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Eight standouts elected to Hall of Fame

Last updated: 5/29/07 5:13 PM

Eight standouts from three centuries have been

elected to the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame.

Jockeys Jose Santos and John Sellers, trainers Henry Forrest, Frank McCabe

and John Veitch, and the horses Mom's Command, Silver Charm and Swoon's Son

comprise the 52nd Hall of Fame class and will be inducted in a special ceremony

in Saratoga Springs, New York, on August 6.

Santos, Veitch, Mom's Command and Silver Charm were elected in the

contemporary categories. Sellers, Forrest, McCabe and Swoon's Son were elected

by the Historic Review Committee, which considers candidates who have not been

active for at least 25 years. Forrest, who saddled two Kentucky Derby winners,

and McCabe, whose resume includes developing three Hall of Fame horses, tied in

the voting for trainer.

The class is the largest since nine were inducted in 1978.

During his career, Veitch, 61, trained four champions, but his best-known

horse is Hall of Fame member Alydar, who was part of the great rivalry with

Affirmed in 1977 and 1978. Retired from training since 2003, Veitch is the Chief

State Steward in Kentucky. He joins his father in the Hall of Fame. The late

Sylvester Veitch, who trained from 1946 until 1984, was inducted in 1977.

"It's actually the dream of a lifetime," Veitch said. "When my father was

inducted and I saw how important it was to him, it made me realize what an

achievement it was. My father said that the day they inducted him was the

greatest day in his life. That certainly was the greatest day in my life, also,

but the day I get inducted will be the second and I will remember it forever.

"It's the culmination of all the great horses that I've had the privilege to

train and the great owners that I represented. It's a great thing."

The Veitches become the eighth family with multiple members in the Hall of

Fame. The Burch family of trainers is represented by three generations: William

P., inducted in the inaugural class in 1955, his son, Preston M., who was

inducted in 1963, and his grandson, J. Elliott, inducted in 1980.

Trainer Max Hirsch was inducted in 1959 and his son, William "Buddy," was

honored in 1982; the Jones Boys, who handled Calumet Farm's powerful stable,

were inducted in successive years: Ben in 1958 and his son, Jimmy, in 1959;

trainer Marion Van Berg was inducted in 1970 and his son, Jack, was inducted in

1985; trainer G. Carey Winfrey was inducted in 1975, four years after the

induction of his step-son, William C. Winfrey.

The Smithwick brothers, jockey A. P. "Paddy" and trainer D. M. "Mikey," were

elected for their accomplishments in steeplechase racing. Mikey was inducted in

1971; Paddy in 1973. Also from steeplechase racing are trainer Michael Walsh,

inducted in 1997, and his nephew, jockey Thomas Walsh, inducted in 2005.

John Veitch's champions were Davona Dale, Our Mims, Before Dawn and Sunshine

Forever. Davona Dale and Alydar are members of the Hall of Fame. After serving

as an assistant for his father and Elliott Burch, Veitch opened a small public

stable in 1974. He subsequently was offered the position as private trainer for

Calumet Farm and guided that historic stable back to prominence. He moved on to

become the private trainer for the Galbreath family's Darby Dan Farm and enjoyed

a long run of success.

In North America from 1974 through his retirement, Veitch recorded 410

victories from 2,340 starters with purse earnings of $20,097,920. He won 76

graded stakes from 401 starts, 19 percent, and a total of 93 stakes from 500

starts.

Jose Santos, earning his biggest career

victory aboard Funny Cide in the Kentucky Derby, has won

more than 4,000 races in North America

(Michael J. Marten/Horsephotos.com)

Santos, 46, the rider of the 2003 Kentucky Derby (G1), Preakness S. (G1) and

2004 Jockey Club Gold

Cup S. (G1) winner Funny Cide (Distorted Humor), was born in Chile and recorded his first victory there in

1976. He arrived in the United States on January 3, 1984 and quickly established

himself as a prominent rider. He was the nation's leading rider in earnings for

four consecutive years, from 1986 to 1989, and was the Eclipse Award-winning

jockey in 1988 when he set a record for purse earnings of $14,856,214.

Through December 31, 2006, Equibase statistics show Santos had 4,076

victories in North America with purse earnings of $186,936,820. In addition to

Funny Cide, he has been the regular rider or frequent rider of champions Manila,

Meadow Star, Criminal Type, Lemon Drop Kid, Chief Bearhart, Fleet Indian, Fly So Free and Rubiano.

He's won all three legs of the Triple Crown.

"It's a great honor just to be nominated and to be elected to the Hall of

Fame is even bigger," Santos said. "I know the history of the Hall of Fame in

the United States, that it is all of the best. To be joining them, I don't have

words to express myself."

Santos is recovering from injuries he sustained in a spill at Aqueduct in

February and is considering a return to riding.

In North America through December 31, 2006, Santos had won 331 graded stakes

and an overall total of 608 stakes races. Santos has won the Jockey Club Gold Cup three times,

the United Nations Handicap four times; he has three wins in the Personal

Ensign, the Spinaway, the Pegasus, the Carter Handicap and the Withers, and two

wins in the Breeders' Cup Turf, the Breeders' Cup Juvenile, the Arlington

Million, Coaching Club American Oaks, Cigar Mile, Caesar's International,

Florida Derby, Flower Bowl, Futurity, Hawthorne Gold Cup, Haskell, Jerome, Man

o' War, Matron, Metropolitan, Turf Classic and Whitney.

Santos has won a total of seven Breeders' Cup races. In 2006, he won six

stakes races with Fleet Indian, who was named champion older female.

Silver Charm is the second horse raced by Robert and Beverly Lewis to be

elected to the Hall of Fame, following Serena's Song, inducted in 2002.

Racing from 1996 through 1999 for trainer Bob Baffert, Silver Charm won 12 of

24 starts and earned $6,944,369 in purse money. Eight years after his final

race, he stands seventh on the career earnings list.

Silver Charm rose to international prominence in 1997 when he edged Captain Bodgit by a head in the Kentucky Derby and prevailed by a head over Free House

in the Preakness with Captain Bodgit another head back in third. The

Florida-bred son of Silver Buck out of the Poker mare, Bonnie's Poker, had the

lead in the stretch of the Belmont S. (G1) and appeared poised to complete the

sweep of the Triple Crown, but was passed by Touch Gold and finished second by

three-quarters of a length. He was the champion three-year-old.

At four, Silver Charm defeated Swain by a nose in the Dubai World Cup

(UAE-G1) and

also won the San Fernando Breeders' Cup S. (G2), the Charles H. Strub S. (G2), the Goodwood

Breeders' Cup H. (G2), the Clark H. (G2) and

dead-heated for first with Wild Rush in the Kentucky Cup Classic H. (G3). In the

Breeders' Cup Classic (G1), he was second to Awesome Again, while beating Swain and

Skip Away.

Silver Charm was retired as a 5-year-old with 11 graded/group stakes

victories. He stands at stud in Japan.

"I'm thrilled to pieces," said Beverly Lewis, who raced Silver Charm with her

late husband. "He's the horse that people just love. I'm just so happy that he's

there where he belongs."

Mom's Command, bred and owned by Peter Fuller and primarily ridden by his

daughter, Abby, was the champion three-year-old filly of 1985. Trained by Edward T.

"Ned" Allard, the front-running filly won seven of nine starts that year,

including the New York filly Triple Crown of the one-mile Acorn S. (G1), the 1

1/8-mile Mother Goose S. (G1) and the 1 1/2-mile Coaching Club American Oaks (G1). After finishing

second to Hall of Famer Lady's Secret in the Test S. (G2), she defeated Fran's Valentine

in the historic Alabama S. (G1) in what turned out to be her final start.

"Of course, I'm thrilled to have her elected to the Hall of Fame," Peter

Fuller, 84, said. "I think she does deserve it and I think the fact that my

daughter rode her is one of those things that is just marvelous. It's very

helpful to racing, in particular. I have a fellow who teases me, 'You're the

only fellow who bred the horse and the jockey,' which I think is pretty cute."

Mom's Command compiled a record of 11-2-1 in 16 starts, all in stakes, and

earned $902,972. She was euthanized on February 3 at the age of 25 at Fuller's farm

in New Hampshire.

Sellers, 69, was born in Los Angeles and was raised in Oklahoma. He rode from

1955 through 1977. The peak of his career was the decade of the 1960s when he

finished in the top ten nationally in purse money won five times in a span of

six years. He led the nation in victories, 328, and was second in purses in

1961, the year he rode Hall of Famer Carry Back to victories in the Kentucky

Derby and the Preakness.

Sellers won many of the major stakes in the United States, including the

Belmont, Alabama, Travers, Blue Grass, Kentucky Oaks, Florida Derby, Garden

State, United Nations Handicap, San Juan Capistrano, San Luis Obispo, San

Felipe, Sunset, Hollywood Derby, Carter, Del Mar Invitational and the Whitney.

Sellers was moved by the news of his election to the Hall of Fame.

"I have tears in my eyes right now," he said. "That's for real."

Sellers recalled being nominated in the Contemporary Jockey category in 1987.

"That was the year Walter Blum won, and he deservedly should have," Sellers

said. "That was as close as I got. It was very neat, just even to be nominated,

but this is incredible."

Sellers is a bloodstock agent and lives in Hallandale, Florida.

Forrest was a

native of Covington, Kentucky, and trained from 1937 until his death in 1975 at the

age of 69. He saw every Kentucky Derby from 1921 until his death and trained the

Derby and Preakness winners Kauai King in 1966 and Forward Pass in 1968.

During his career, Forrest trained for both Calumet Farm and Claiborne Farm.

He finished in the top 10 nationally in races won in a season eight times and

twice was in the top 10 nationally in purse money won. At the time of his death,

he held the career record for victories at Keeneland, 153, and Churchill Downs,

271.

Forward Pass finished second in the Derby, but was declared the winner when

Peter Fuller's colt, Dancer's Image, was disqualified for testing positive for a

banned substance. In the Preakness, Forward Pass won by six lengths over a

10-horse field that included Dancer's Image. He was second in the Belmont and

the Travers. The colt also won the Florida Derby, the American Derby, the

Hibiscus, the Everglades and the Blue Grass and was voted the champion

three-year-old in two polls.

"This is absolutely wonderful," said Forrest's daughter, Jennie Watkins. "His

life was dedicated to racing. He was in the horse business his entire career and

achieved what is the ultimate goal: to train a Kentucky Derby winner, and not

one but two. It was his life. I think this is such a tribute to him and his

memory this many years later to have such a wonderful thing happen."

McCabe was a distinguished trainer in a career that spanned the later part of

the 19th century and the early decades of the 20th century. He was born in Patterson, New

Jersey, in 1859 and became an assistant to

trainer James Rowe, who was a member of the first Hall of Fame class in 1955.

When Rowe ended his relationship with the Dwyer brothers, who were prominent

owners at the time, in 1884, McCabe became their trainer. He trained Hall of Famer Hanover, winner of the Brooklyn Handicap, Belmont Stakes, Withers and

United States Hotel. McCabe trained three consecutive Belmont winners: Inspector

B. in 1886; Hanover in 1887; and Sir Dixon in 1888.

During that same period, McCabe trained Tremont, who was unbeaten in 13

starts as a two-year-old in 1886, and was considered a champion.

McCabe's other Hall of Fame horses were Kingston, a 1955 inductee, who won 89

of 138 starts, including 30 stakes and retired as America's leading money winner

at $140,195; and Miss Woodford, who was also handled by Rowe. Miss Woodford,

elected to the Hall of Fame in 1967, won the Ladies Stakes, Alabama, Monmouth

Oaks and Pimlico Stakes. She was the first horse bred and raced in America to

earn more than $100,000.

McCabe, who died in 1924, also won the Travers with Inspector B., Sir Dixon

and Sir John.

Swoon's Son was a top stakes horse during a four-season career in the 1950s.

Bred and owned by Kentuckian E. Gay Drake, a charter member of the Thoroughbred

Club of America, Swoon's Son won 30 of 51 starts. When he was retired to stud in

1958, he was the fourth-leading money-winner in the world at $907,605.

For most of his career, Swoon's Son raced in the Midwest, primarily at tracks

in Chicago and Kentucky. He was trained by Lex Wilson and ridden in all but one

race by Dave Erb. Swoon's Son won 22 stakes, including the Arlington Futurity

and Bashford Manor at two; the American Derby, Arlington Classic and Clark

Handicap at three, and the Equipoise Mile Handicap at four and five. Notable

horses that Swoon's Son defeated were Preakness winner Fabius, Kentucky

Derby/Belmont winner Needles, plus Round Table and Bardstown.

Drake's grandson Jack Jones now operates the family's Mineola Farm near

Lexington, Kentucky, where Swoon's Son was bred. Jones was a witness to Swoon's Son's

success.

"I was eight, nine, 10 years old at the time, but I've got fond memories of

his racing career, as well as having been with Lex Wilson and Dave Erb," Jones

said.

"I'm just overjoyed with his election. I'm just sorry that my grandfather

wasn't alive to see this happen. I know it was his pride and joy and crowning

achievement in all the years that he bred and raced horses along with his full

brother Dogoon. They were running simultaneously during that period."

Drake died in 1974.

The 16-member Nominating Committee considered more than 100 candidates for

the contemporary categories before selecting 13 finalists. To qualify for the

ballot, candidates were required to receive at least a majority of votes from

the committee. The winners received the most votes from the 186 voters in the

United States and Canada. A total of 177 ballots, 95 percent, were returned.

The Historic Review Committee is composed of 12 members. The committee

reviewed and discussed the credentials of the nominees during a conference call

and voted to select a finalist in each category. To be elected, the finalist was

required to receive approval from at least 75 percent of the committee members.

When McCabe and Forrest finished in a dead-heat, both were elected to the Hall of

Fame.

Edward L. Bowen chairs both Hall of Fame Nominating Committee and the Historic

Review Committee. The latter committees' members are National Museum of Racing historian Allan

Carter; Jane Goldstein, retired publicist at Santa Anita; National Museum of

Racing trustee Ken

Grayson; Russ Harris, handicapper and turf writer for the New York Daily News;

Daily Racing Form Executive Columnist Jay Hovdey; writer and author Bill

Mooney; writer and author William Nack, National Museum of Racing Chairman John von Stade; and

Fort Worth Star-Telegram turf writer Gary West.

The Hall of Fame induction ceremony will be held at 10:30 a.m. (EDT) on

Monday,

August 6, at the Fasig-Tipton Sales Pavilion in Saratoga Springs. The event is

open to the public and is free to attend.

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